A good friend has a food phobic kid, he goes to weekly sessions to try and get him used to the food, being in the same room, touching it, putting it to their lips, then on their tounge etc
However they have also said hungry kids kids eat, unless you give them enough emotionally for it to be worthwhile starving.
It is one thing if the few things they want to eat are healthy or reasonably healthy.
I would have a lot more understanding of how a parent could have let it get do bad if the kid had only been eating pasta, corn and apples rather than junk food.
So glad that the greatest medical minds are on the Dis boards, As someone who has a child with food and stomach issues. In fact he has been on a feeding tube since last November, I'm sure people like this one "
Seems like he was allowed to continue to eat poorly instead of his parents doing some serious intervention.
What a shame for him. " know that we should do, just should just shove food down our kids throat. My son went 48 hours without eating because of this, so tell me how I was going to make him eat. Also our doctors informed us that if we forced fed him we could have more food issues, so please tell me how we should treat him? Because I'm sure that you know what everyone should do.
As we’ve established, I’m no medical professional and I’m curious about something: Why is this condition not prevalent in severe anorexics? I’ve not known anyone personally but when seen in the media, some of them are absolutely skeletal and they often die from heart attacks or organ failure due to their bodies “consuming” themselves. This boy apparently had a relatively normal weight (obviously due to the calorie density of the crap he ate) but wouldn’t an anorexic who ate virtually nothing actually be at greater risk? Maybe they are and I’ve just never heard of it. Please comment.Now documented in medical literature: Teenager develops permanent blindness, deafness and bone disorders from eating a diet consisting of just French fries, Pringles potato chips, white bread and sausage for a decade. Has to drop out of school because he can't see or hear, and mother has to quit job to care for him at home full time. What a disaster for this young man and his family!
https://www.msn.com/en-sg/health/me...ood-diet-report-reveals/ar-AAGI0Y3?li=AAaGkVj
Edit: detail correction
I was wondering this too. I was wondering if it has more to do with the age of onset & interfering w/ development. Seems this kid had been doing this for years from a young age. Usually anorexia doesn’t start that early.As we’ve established, I’m no medical professional and I’m curious about something: Why is this condition not prevalent in severe anorexics? I’ve not known anyone personally but when seen in the media, some of them are absolutely skeletal and they often die from heart attacks or organ failure due to their bodies “consuming” themselves. This boy apparently had a relatively normal weight (obviously due to the calorie density of the crap he ate) but wouldn’t an anorexic who ate virtually nothing actually be at greater risk? Maybe they are and I’ve just never heard of it. Please comment.
As we’ve established, I’m no medical professional and I’m curious about something: Why is this condition not prevalent in severe anorexics? I’ve not known anyone personally but when seen in the media, some of them are absolutely skeletal and they often die from heart attacks or organ failure due to their bodies “consuming” themselves. This boy apparently had a relatively normal weight (obviously due to the calorie density of the crap he ate) but wouldn’t an anorexic who ate virtually nothing actually be at greater risk? Maybe they are and I’ve just never heard of it. Please comment.
I would think a severe anorexic would die before this condition was manifest. It could also be that the age of onset for this young man was at a particularly crucial time in development. Most anorexics experience onset between 11-15 years old, which is a different stage developmentally.
I've personally never heard of blindness or deafness from anorexia (and I know a LOT of people afflicted by this because of my experience as a caregiver of my daughter). Doesn't mean it hasn't happened. Just that I think it's rare for anorexics. Death is a relatively common outcome for them however.
Anorexics don't get enough calories to sustain them. This kid wasn't getting proper vitamins and minerals (Low B12, Selenium, Copper, D,)As we’ve established, I’m no medical professional and I’m curious about something: Why is this condition not prevalent in severe anorexics? I’ve not known anyone personally but when seen in the media, some of them are absolutely skeletal and they often die from heart attacks or organ failure due to their bodies “consuming” themselves. This boy apparently had a relatively normal weight (obviously due to the calorie density of the crap he ate) but wouldn’t an anorexic who ate virtually nothing actually be at greater risk? Maybe they are and I’ve just never heard of it. Please comment.
I feel for all involved. ARFID is a very poorly understood form of eating disorder. And very difficult to treat, like all eating disorders. I know because my daughter suffered from restrictive anorexia when she was 13 (she is now in a good solid recovery, but it took YEARS of aggressive treatment). If I had a dollar for every person who said to me during that time "just make her eat"...I'd be a very, very wealthy person. How, exactly, do you DO that. Do you hold them down and shove food in their mouth? It's not easy. It's not simple. And, it's an ILLNESS that needs treatment. Not a matter of the person simply "refusing" to eat. They CAN'T eat without causing tremendous anxiety and stress. Eating is the hardest thing in the world for them to do. Think of the scariest thing YOU can imagine....now imagine being FORCED to do that thing 4-5 times a day for the rest of your life. That's what eating is like for someone with an eating disorder..absolutely panic inducing. Because the FEAR center of their brains (fight or flight) light up when confronted with food...for you and I, who LIKE to eat, it's the pleasure center. Very different.
With a kid with ARFID, it's tricky. There are things they WILL eat, and outside of those things, they simply will NOT. Vitamins and supplements included.
Treatment is available, but not in all countries and areas. In this field, we have a saying that "bad treatment is worse than no treatment at all" and it could very well be that this young man and his family had BAD treatment. If the parents were getting treatment (and it sounds like they were) and it was "bad" then, why are we shaming them? Good grief.
Unless you've walked in these shoes, just please shut up. You have no idea. None at all.
Agreed & like pp mentioned his/her DS has a feeding tube so there seems to be some treatments even if extreme to prevent the situation from OP.Sorry, not going to shut up about this. You are free to speak your oprinions based on what you are going through, so are the rest of us. We don't need to agree but you have no right to tell others to shut up because you don't like what you are hearing.
All I hear is people blaming the parents. There is zero empathy for parents dealing with eating disorders in their children.Sorry, not going to shut up about this. You are free to speak your oprinions based on what you are going through, so are the rest of us. We don't need to agree but you have no right to tell others to shut up because you don't like what you are hearing.
In a quick literature review, Anorexia Nervosa does appear to be one of the risk factors for Nutritional Optic Neuropathy, but there are others, as well.As we’ve established, I’m no medical professional and I’m curious about something: Why is this condition not prevalent in severe anorexics? I’ve not known anyone personally but when seen in the media, some of them are absolutely skeletal and they often die from heart attacks or organ failure due to their bodies “consuming” themselves. This boy apparently had a relatively normal weight (obviously due to the calorie density of the crap he ate) but wouldn’t an anorexic who ate virtually nothing actually be at greater risk? Maybe they are and I’ve just never heard of it. Please comment.
All I hear is people blaming the parents. There is zero empathy for parents dealing with eating disorders in their children.
All I hear is people blaming the parents. There is zero empathy for parents dealing with eating disorders in their children.
Parents are not responsible for their children's eating disorders, with the rare exceptions of abuse. Full stop.So are his parents not responsible for his healthcare, mental and physical?
Does him having an eating disorder somehow make it so they aren't?
Parents are not responsible for their children's eating disorders, with the rare exceptions of abuse. Full stop.